Aneeda72
Well-known Member
Foster care is hard and I am sorry this happened to you. The social workers should have had the brains to move the baby when they saw how attached you were becoming or your social worker should have warned you.
I did foster care for around 30 years. Infants through teenagers. It’s always hard, but they always leave. The young ones, the baby will forget you. You will become a vague memory. Hard to hear, but hopefully it will bring you some comfort, even though you won’t forget him.
It is this way because children want to be with their biological parents. When they turn 18 they search for them. My son with Down Syndrome, who we adopted out of the ICU, knows he’s adopted and asks about his bio parents. Children want the biological connection. All adoptions are now open adoptions for the most part, if the bio parents are alive, they get access.
My daughter is raising her granddaughter. My daughter adopted her daughter when she was 15. When her daughter turned 18 she left to find her bio mother. The woman who raised her in a tent, next to a stream, and never sent her to school. Yup, that’s what she preferred.
Got hooked up with a guy, got pregnant, and the guy called my daughter to come get her kid, and her granddaughter, he was tired of them. She got them. They all move. Daughter hooks up with another guy, runs off, taking baby. Guy takes off, tired of her. Long story on what happened, but child services calls my daughter one night says come get your daughter and her baby by midnight or we are taking the baby.
Daughter and husband race the clock, barely making it in time. Fast forward. Granddaughter moves out, leaving baby with her adoptive mother. My adoptive granddaughter wanted to give her baby to her biological mother.
She is blocked from doing so by the court and will go to jail if she attempts to remove the baby from my daughter. Sorry this is long.
My daughter and her husband in their late forties, are raising the baby who is not in foster care, and who they do not custody of, the baby is in a legal crack. Baby’s mother has not been seen in 4 months. Baby’s father has never been seen since baby was 4 weeks. Social service is non committal and non supportive and has not taken custody of the baby who will soon be three years old. She calls her grandparents mom and dad. She calls us her grandparents.
My daughter and her husband have hired an adoption attorney for them, a lawyer for the baby, and private investigator to find baby daddy and interact with social service. They sold a car to help pay for expenses. The mother, their adoptive daughter, has signed the baby over. Non supportive baby daddy, who has 3 kids all my different mothers, refuses to do so.
My great granddaughter remains fallen though the crack. What happened to you is, sorry to say, typical even for people related to the baby. You are wise not to take any more children. (My daughter did foster care for 10 years.)
I did foster care for around 30 years. Infants through teenagers. It’s always hard, but they always leave. The young ones, the baby will forget you. You will become a vague memory. Hard to hear, but hopefully it will bring you some comfort, even though you won’t forget him.
It is this way because children want to be with their biological parents. When they turn 18 they search for them. My son with Down Syndrome, who we adopted out of the ICU, knows he’s adopted and asks about his bio parents. Children want the biological connection. All adoptions are now open adoptions for the most part, if the bio parents are alive, they get access.
My daughter is raising her granddaughter. My daughter adopted her daughter when she was 15. When her daughter turned 18 she left to find her bio mother. The woman who raised her in a tent, next to a stream, and never sent her to school. Yup, that’s what she preferred.
Got hooked up with a guy, got pregnant, and the guy called my daughter to come get her kid, and her granddaughter, he was tired of them. She got them. They all move. Daughter hooks up with another guy, runs off, taking baby. Guy takes off, tired of her. Long story on what happened, but child services calls my daughter one night says come get your daughter and her baby by midnight or we are taking the baby.
Daughter and husband race the clock, barely making it in time. Fast forward. Granddaughter moves out, leaving baby with her adoptive mother. My adoptive granddaughter wanted to give her baby to her biological mother.

My daughter and her husband in their late forties, are raising the baby who is not in foster care, and who they do not custody of, the baby is in a legal crack. Baby’s mother has not been seen in 4 months. Baby’s father has never been seen since baby was 4 weeks. Social service is non committal and non supportive and has not taken custody of the baby who will soon be three years old. She calls her grandparents mom and dad. She calls us her grandparents.
My daughter and her husband have hired an adoption attorney for them, a lawyer for the baby, and private investigator to find baby daddy and interact with social service. They sold a car to help pay for expenses. The mother, their adoptive daughter, has signed the baby over. Non supportive baby daddy, who has 3 kids all my different mothers, refuses to do so.
My great granddaughter remains fallen though the crack. What happened to you is, sorry to say, typical even for people related to the baby. You are wise not to take any more children. (My daughter did foster care for 10 years.)